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Out of sight, out of mind: Why we must open our eyes to avoidable sight loss – The Tablet

October 12th, 2019 5:41 pm

The World Health Organisation report was published ahead of Christian Blind Mission Sunday on 13 October Photo: CBM

The first ever World Report on Vision, published by the World Health Organisation this week, highlights that more than a billion people are living with sight loss that could have been prevented or treated. Published ahead of World Sight Day on 10 October, the report provides a comprehensive review of the global evidence on blindness, visual impairment and access to eye health services worldwide.

The gaps highlighted in the report come as no surprise to us at Christian Blind Mission. For decades, we have been working in the worlds poorest places to strengthen sight-saving eye health services, working in partnership with local hospitals and health authorities to deliver more treatments for blinding diseases, train eye health workers and improve access to sight-restoring surgeries. A shocking 75 per cent of the worlds blindness is avoidable. That means every day, people are losing their sight because of diseases or conditions that could be prevented or treated.

The burden of needless blindness falls most heavily on the worlds poorest, where poor living conditions leave people at higher risk of disease and sight-saving treatment is often out of reach. The new report finds that rates of blindness in low- and middle-income countries are eight times higher than in high-income countries.

Too often, for people living in poverty, losing your sight also means losing the chance to go to school, earn a living or participate in your community. In many places, stigma against people with disabilities such as blindness for example the belief they cannot contribute to society results in discrimination and exclusion. We need an approach that both delivers eye health services and also tackles the wider barriers people face to inclusion everything from providing white canes and clear signage to training health workers to address the needs of patients with disabilities.

This week, churches across the UK are joining the fight against avoidable blindness by taking part in Christian Blind Mission Sunday. On or around 13 October, more than 140 churches are getting involved, inspired by Jesus radical example of solidarity with, and compassion for, marginalised people, to learn, pray and fundraise, to help reach people living with avoidable blindness.

In many churches, Christian Blind Mission Sunday will include the story of Jesus healing of a man born blind in Johns gospel (9:1-9). But stories of children, men and women living with avoidable blindness today will also feature people like Shalom, from Uganda, East Africa.

Shalom was three years old when her mother, Fridah, noticed she was blinking and squinting a lot in the sun. Now aged five, Shalom can barely see and had to stop going to school. Other children have been cruel to her, calling her names and throwing her toy doll, knowing that she will struggle to find it and pick it up.

Pic: CBM

Her mother told us: Shalom also wakes up and asks me: 'Mummy, am I also going to school today?' I tell her that she will go back to school when her sight is better.

Shaloms sight loss was caused by cataracts, a condition that clouds the lens of the eye. Cataracts cause half of all blindness and can be treated with straightforward surgery. While they mostly affect older people, some children are born with cataracts. For them, treatment is vital within a few years, or their blindness will be life-long. A cataract operation costs less than 100 for a child, just 24 for an adult, as they dont need general anaesthetic. But for families like Shalom, living in poverty, the cost of treatment or even transport to reach it is simply out of reach.

Thanks to initiatives like Christian Blind Mission Sunday and the vital funds they raise, CBM is working with hospitals, health authorities and other partners in Uganda and many other low-income countries to ensure that children like Shalom can access treatment, so they dont face a lifetime of needless blindness simply because they are poor. In the areas where we work, weve seen major progress, with stronger, more accessible and affordable eye-health services delivering hundreds of thousands of eye examinations, pairs of glasses and sight-restoring surgeries every year. But, as the WHO report finds, global efforts need to be dramatically scaled up if were to eliminate avoidable blindness and visual impairment.

The theme for this years Christian Blind Mission Sunday is Out of sight, out of mind, because too often, the needs of people with blindness or visual impairment have been ignored or overlooked, within their own communities and also on a global stage. We hope that the WHOs World Vision Report marks a pivotal moment, galvanising global action to improve eye health services, especially for the worlds poorest.

Kirsty Smith is Chief Executive CBM UK

Christian Blind Mission (CBM) is an international organisation working in the worlds poorest places to prevent blindness, improve health and transform the lives of people with disabilities. http://www.cbmuk.org.uk

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Out of sight, out of mind: Why we must open our eyes to avoidable sight loss - The Tablet

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